Methods Inf Med 2010; 49(01): 81-87
DOI: 10.3414/ME09-02-0002
Original Articles
Schattauer GmbH

OmniSCOPE: Composing Universal Therapies

M. de Sá
1   LaSIGE and University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal
,
L. Carriço
1   LaSIGE and University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

received: 19 June 2009

accepted: 11 November 2009

Publication Date:
17 January 2018 (online)

Summary

Objectives: This paper presents Omni SCOPE, an environment for the development of mobile pervasive therapy artifacts. OmniSCOPE builds on SCOPE, a tool for the support of mobile psychotherapy. It aims at providing therapists with means to adjust and compose new therapeutic artifacts to suit their patients’ needs and new therapeutic approaches.

Methods: Given the positive results that emerged through the development and utilization of SCOPE, a previous single therapy version of Omni SCOPE, extensions were developed in order to enhance the artifacts, the data collection by patients and its consequent analysis by therapists. These extend the usage possibilities to new situations and therapies also targeting a wider range of users and were developed following a user-centered design approach.

Results: As results, we detail the extensions and how they support new activities and therapies illustrated by two case studies in which they are being currently evaluated. Initial results from the involved therapists’ assessment and future trends and directions are also discussed.

Conclusions: The features and accessible artifacts that can be composed with Omni-SCOPE have provided therapists with the possibility to enhance their therapy procedures and to reach a wider audience of patients even while out of the office. Additionally, the data gathering options that can be included within the therapeutic artifacts provide much more detail which can clearly facilitate diagnosis and posterior therapy adjustments.

 
  • References

  • 1 Sá M, Carriço L, Antunes P. Ubiquitous Psychotherapy. IEEE Pervasive Computing, 2007; 6 (01) 20-27.
  • 2 Serrano M. et al. Multimodal interaction on mobile phones: development and evaluation using ACI-CARE. In: Proceedings of Mobile HCI’06, September 12-15, 2006, Espoo, Finland.: ACM; 2006. pp 129-136.
  • 3 Sá M, et al.. Supporting the Design of Mobile Arte-facts for Paper-Based Activities. In: Proceedings of CADUI’08, June 11-13, 2008, Albacete, Spain: Springer; 2008. pp 137-150.
  • 4 Proudfoot J. Computer-based treatment for anxiety and depression: is it feasible? Is it effective?. Elsevier; Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 2004; 28 (03) 353-363.
  • 5 Hailpern J. Encouraging Speech and Vocalization in Children with Autistic Spectrum Disorder. ACM; SIGAccess Newsletter 2007; 89: 47-52.
  • 6 Newman MG. Technology in psychotherapy: an introduction. Journal of Clinical Psychology 2004; 60 (02) 141-145.
  • 7 Bälter O. et al. Wizard-of-Oz Test of ARTUR – a Computer-Based Speech Training System with Articulation Correction. Proceedings of ASSETS’05, October 9-12, 2005, Baltimore, USA: ACM; pp 36-43.
  • 8 Xu W. et al. Real-Time Collaborative Annotation and Information Visualization in a Biofeedback System for Stroke Patient Rehabilitation. In: Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop Capture Archival, Retrieval of Personal Experiences, California, USA: Oct 28-28, 2006. ACM; 2006. pp 3-12.
  • 9 Tate D, Zabinski M. Computer and internet applications for psychological treatment. Journal of Clinical Psychology 2004; 60 (02) 209-220.
  • 10 Carriço L, Sá M, Antunes P. Proactive Psychotherapy with Handheld Devices. In: Proceedings of ICEIS 2006, the 8th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems, Paphos – Cyprus 2006 pp 27-34.
  • 11 Sá M, Carriço L. Mobile Support for Personalized Therapies – OmniSCOPE: Richer Artefacts and Data Collection. 3rd International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare, London, UK: April 1-3, 2009. IEEE Press; April 2009
  • 12 Allen M, Mcgrenere J, Purves B. The Field Evaluation of a Mobile Digital Image Communication Application Designed for People with Aphasia. ACM; Trans on Accessible Computing 2008; 1 (01) 1-26.
  • 13 Moffatt K. et al. The Participatory Design of a Sound and Image Enhanced Daily Planner for People with Aphasia. In: Proceedings of CHI 2004, April 24-29, 2004, Vienna, Austria: ACM; 2004. pp 407-414.